Musical sound has been central to heteromasculinist productions of nation and homeland, whether Chicano, Tejano, Texan, Mexican, or American. If this assertion holds true, as Deborah R. Vargas suggests, then what are...

Buy Now From Amazon

Product Review

Musical sound has been central to heteromasculinist productions of nation and homeland, whether Chicano, Tejano, Texan, Mexican, or American. If this assertion holds true, as Deborah R. Vargas suggests, then what are we to make of those singers and musicians whose representations of gender and sexuality are irreconcilable with canonical Chicano/Tejano music or what Vargas refers to as “la onda”? These are the “dissonant divas” Vargas discusses, performers who stimulate our listening for alternative borderlands imaginaries that are inaudible within the limits of “la onda.”

Dissonant Divas in Chicana Music focuses on the Texan monument of the Alamo and its association with Rosita Fernandez; Tejano corrido folklore and its musical antithesis in Chelo Silva; the female accordion-playing bodies of Ventura Alonza and Eva Ybarra as incompatible with the instrumental labor of conjunto music; geography as national border, explored through the multiple national music scales negotiated by Eva Garza; and racialized gender, viewed through Selena’s integration of black diasporic musical sound. Vargas offers a feminist analysis of these figures’ contributions by advancing a notion of musical dissonance—a dissonance that recognizes the complexity of gender, sexuality, and power within Chicana/o culture.

Incorporating ethnographic fieldwork, oral history, and archival research, Vargas’s study demonstrates how these singers work together to explode the limits of Texan, Chicano, Tejano, Mexican, and American identities.



Similar Products

Dancing across Borders: Danzas y Bailes MexicanosLand of a Thousand Dances: Chicano Rock 'n' Roll from Southern CaliforniaTransnational Encounters: Music and Performance at the U.S.-Mexico BorderViolence Girl: East L.A. Rage to Hollywood Stage, a Chicana Punk StoryDecolonize Your Diet: Plant-Based Mexican-American Recipes for Health and HealingChicana Art: The Politics of Spiritual and Aesthetic Altarities (Objects/Histories)The Hip Hop Wars: What We Talk About When We Talk About Hip Hop--and Why It MattersThere Was a Woman: La Llorona from Folklore to Popular CultureFleshing the Spirit: Spirituality and Activism in Chicana, Latina, and Indigenous Women’s Lives